Cyberattacks uphold elsewhere as the ii reports below show. single attack impacted the COVID-19 vaccination portal in the country of Georgia. An unrelated tone-beginning affected a municipality in Romania. Georgia like many countries, Georgia has been dealing with a significant increase in number of new COVID cases after previously lifting some restrictions. On July 2, the country received one million doses of the Sinopharm and Sinovac vaccines from China. a reservation window was opened for people to register to capture the vaccine, but on Saturday (July 3), the registration portal at booking.moh.gov.ge was hacked, disrupting the sign-up process for the day. Ekhokavkaza reported (translation) that the Georgian Ministry of Internal Affairs launched an investigation into the cyberattack: The Ministry of Internal Affairs opened a case under Articles 285 and 286 of the Criminal encipher of Georgia – “illegal utilisation of computer data and computer systems”, as wellspring as “encroachment on computer data and computer systems.” In an update on July 4, Tass reported that the site was restored nearly a day after the attack. Georgia’s National snapper for Disease control & Public health issued a notice on its Facebook varlet that the booking page had been restored and citizens were encouraged to contract up to get vaccinated. Romania The municipality of Oradea issued a statement on July 5 about an attack. a machine translation indicates that in the “Counter Room” (Pyramid) on the first story of the municipal hall, no functions could live performed other than collecting taxes and duties. piece the municipality reassured the public that 100% of the data would be recovered from the ransomware snipe by using backups, it was not crystallise how long that restitution would take. “Until its complete restoration, the IDC document management system will not be operational,” the municipality writes, apologizing for the inconvenience. Puterea reported that the city administrator, Mihai Jurca, described the tone-beginning this way (translation): The round started from a file inserted on the city Hall servers that infected the surrounding files. In such cases, the protocol requires disconnecting the system, neutralizing the infected files, checking the databases to see if there are other affected files. The network in the office with the public was stopped for security reasons. On July 6, the city announced that all operations had been resumed in the morn and all data had been recovered. Neither Georgia nor Oradea mentioned the specific type of malware used in the attacks on them or who the threat actors might be. The Oradea incident was specifically identified as a ransomware incident. The georgia incident was not labeled as such but sounds like it may have been one. Reporting by Chum1ng0 with contributions by Dissent; editing by dissent